Downpour, heavy and torrential refer to large amounts of rain.
· refreshing
· relentless
describe rain
Precipitation , drizzle , shower ,
Wet Dingy
The word "metoreture" does not appear to be a valid word. However, if one means a thing used to measure amounts, that could be attributed to many devices. A scale weighs matter of different amounts. A bill counter counts large amounts of money.
a singular word? No.
monies is used when you're discussing large amounts in an economic/business situation - usually not personal finances
The word bulimic means to eat and purge. The word is used to describe an eating disorder where people eat large amounts of food and throw it up.
The word 'rain' functions as both a noun and a verb. Examples:As a noun: The rain made large puddles in the road.As a verb: It will rain today so please remember your umbrella.
Bullet points are usually used in word documents when making lists. They are also used in PowerPoint presentations to summarize large amounts of information.
There is no such word as "corpious". -You possibly mean 'COPIOUS' which means abundant or in large amounts.
No, it is not. The word rain is a noun, which can be used as an adjunct with other nouns as in rain cloud, rain barrel,and rain gauge. There is an adjective (rainy) and an adverb form (rainily) that is virtually never used.
The word "rain" can be a noun or a verb. For example, in the sentence, "I like rain." it is a noun. In the sentence "It is going to rain." it is used as a verb.
big mathy word
no, raining is a transitive verb indicating large quantities of something is falling or intransitive verb indicating rain is falling.
Mvua is the Kikuyu word for the English word rain.